1) issued by the Aeronautics Branch of the Department of Commerce on March 29, 1927.
[5] It was a conventional single-bay biplane with equal-span unstaggered wings and accommodation for the pilot and passengers in tandem open cockpits.
Marketed for a variety of roles including crop-dusting, aerial photography, and freight carriage, only a handful were built, some with water-cooled engines as the CW-3, and others with air-cooled engines as the CA-3 .
One CW-3 and one CA-3 each were evaluated by the United States Army as trainers, but neither were purchased.
Data from Jane's all the World's Aircraft 1928[8]General characteristics Performance